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Thursday, 01 August 2013

New Leica Lens for Micro 4/3

...And should you want a sweet portrait lens for your new GX7, Panasonic has just announced the Leica DG Nocticron 42.5mm (85mm-e) ƒ/1.2.

The nomenclature is a little screwy. In traditional Leica-ese, "-cron" signifies ƒ/2, not ƒ/1.2. However, "Nocticron" is a registered trademark of Leica Camera AG.

But a) people who complained about the old 45mm Macro's slow ƒ/2.8 speed will certainly be happy; b) traditionalists who like manual aperture rings will be happy (it has one); and c) owners of non-stabilized older Panasonic Micro 4/3 bodies will be happy, because the lens has O.I.S. of its own.

Vaporware for now. Coming. Sure to be pricey, but who wants it any other way?

Mike

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(To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below.)Featured Comments from:

B. R. George: "For me, the most interesting aspect of both of today's Panasonic
announcements is the direction they suggest. I'm not especially in the
market for this particular camera (although it looks delightful) or for
this particular lens (although that's more of a temptation), but these
announcements tell me that Panaonic now does IBIS and aperture rings,
and I'm quite interested in both of those features."

I find it ironic that it is Panasonic - a company with its roots on video - doing what Olympus should have done long ago: manufacturing high quality primes for the classic focal lengths. Panasonic has now a 14mm, a 25mm and a 42,5mm, which are equivalent to, respectively, 28mm, 50mm and 85mm. The traditional wide-angle, standard and portrait prime lenses.
I have no prejudice against Panasonic - and I am well aware two of those lenses incorporate the L-brand -, but by rights it should have been Olympus' job to provide these lenses. They did it back in the OM days. I don't know whether it's some contractual bond that prevents Olympus from manufacturing prime lenses of these focal lengths, but I know for sure that Olympus is losing the battle for the head of micro 4/3. They have wonderful bodies, but quirky focal lengths. It baffles me.
As for the GX7, it is likely to trounce the E-P5: not only it is cheaper but it also has an integrated viewfinder. Olympus needs a new Maitani.

Does anyone know if aperture rings on modern lenses like this report aperture in the viewfinder and/or screen? I have one old aperture ring lens (a Zuiko 50/1.2) and I hate the aperture ring, because I have to tilt the camera lens up to look at the lens to see what aperture I have set.

If it reported in the viewfinder, it would work fine, otherwise, it seems like a terrible design.

Will be interesting to have an high quality prime offering an alternative to the already great 45mm by Olympus. IF the IQwill be the one we usually associate with Leica products, I think there'll be a nice market for it.

Leica didn't want to let the name use the hallowed 'Noctilux' name for this product, because, even though that's the designation that's been used for previous Leica f/1.2 lenses, for a while now it's been reserved for extremely high-prestige f/1 and f/0.95 lenses, and they were worried about diluting the prestige of those by attaching the same name to this digital offering.

So if this was going to be a Leica-branded product, they were going to need to come up with a new name, because none of the others applied to this aperture.

Well, they still wanted the venerable 'Noct-' at the beginning, to make it sound awesome and has become a common indicator of large-aperture impressiveness (compare 'Noct-Nikkor', 'Voigtländer Nokton'), but they couldn't use the '-lux' ending, and '-icron' was the next thing they could think of, so they ran with that.

There are some possible variations on this story. Maybe they were trying to suggest Nocticron : Noctilux :: Summicron : Summilux. Maybe they tried 'Noctarit' first but decided that sounded silly. We'll never know exactly how it went.

YS, I am not sure if you answered Davids question. David refers, at least I believe so, to the "old" Zuiko f/1,2 50mm lens for the Olympus OM SLR cameras. If my assumption is correct, then the aperture set will not be reported in the viewfinder. Can't be reported because there are no electronics in the lens to transfer data on the aperture selected.

Before people get too excited I speculate the "aperture ring" is not directly coupled to the aperture diaphragm (as you have to make the aperture electronically controled anyway for P and S mode in any modern lens and for that you need to add an internal motor).

The same is true for Fuji XF lenses and X100.

The aperture ring is just attached to an encoder that talks to the camera to tell it to set a given aperture.

It just has nice looking physical UI in the numbers on the barrel and abosolute position.